18 Colo. 477 | Colo. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
The statute upon which this judgment is sought 'to be upheld reads as follows:
“ Whenever any person shall die from any injury resulting from or occasioned by the negligence, unskillfulness or criminal intent of any officer, agent, servant or employee, whilst running, conducting or managing any locomotive, car or train of cars, or of any driver of any coach or other public conveyance whilst in charge of the same as a driver, and when any passenger shall die from any injury resulting from or occasioned by any defect or insufficiency in any railroad or any part thereof, or in any locomotive or car, or in any stage coach; or other public conveyance, the corporation, individual or individuals, in whose employ any such officer, agent, servant, employee, master, pilot, engineer or driver shall be at the time such injury is committed, or who owns any such railroad, locomotive, car, stage coach or other public conveyance at the time any such injury is received, and resulting from or occasioned by defect or insufficiency above described, shall forfeit and pay for every person and passenger so injured the sum of not exceeding five thousand (5,000) dollars, and not less than three thousand (3,000) dollars, which may be sued*482 for and recovered, etc.” Sec. 1508 Mills’ Ann. Stat. This section received the careful attention of this court in the case of The Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway Company v. Farrow, 6 Colo. 498. The opinion in that case' contains a clear and logical analysis of the statute, and the construction there given it has since been followed without question in this state.
It was held that the section might be divided with reference to persons injured, into two parts; the first giving the right of action to any person injured by the negligence, unskillfulness or criminal intent of any officer, agent, servant or employee, etc.; the second furnishing a right of action where the death of the passenger resulted from a defect or insufficiency of a railroad locomotive, stage coach, or other public conveyance.
Under the foregoing division there is no evidence in this case to sanction a recovery under the first subdivision. The uncontradicted evidence shows that the brakes upon the cars left upon the track were properly set, and it is conclusively shown that if the machinery of the road had been in good order and condition, the brakes would have been sufficient to have held the cars for many hours. It is not urged, nor do we think, considering the character of the train, that it was the duty of the defendant under the circumstances to leave a brakeman in charge of the cars left south of The Denver, Texas and Gulf Crossing. In fact, negligence on the part of any officer, agent, servant or employee -of the defendant is not shown.
An examination of the complaint and a review of the trial in the court below shows clearly that the recovery was had upon the theory that the evidence showed conclusively that the deceased was a passenger upon the road of the defendant at the time of the injury, thereby bringing the case under the second subdivision, there being some evidence tending to show a defect in the air brakes. Whether the company had by its conduct assumed toward the defendant the duties and obligations due from a common carrier to a passenger, was not left to the jury as a question of fact to be determined
The manner in which railway companies conduct their business has been so long followed, with such a degree of uniformity, that the courts are bound to take judicial notice of its general features. Among these may be mentioned the division of their freight and passenger business into two departments, and the separation of their passenger and freight trains. As a general rule freight is not carried upon passenger trains, and passengers are not carried upon freight trains. Where a person riding upon a passenger train is injured, it is a presumption of law that he is entitled to the rights and privileges of a passenger, but this rule does not apply in the case of a train manifestly designed for the carriage of freight, even if such train does have attached to it a caboose, as such vehicles are necessary for the accommodation of the employees of the company, and are usually used for this purpose only.
The fact that Shipman was found in the caboose attached to the freight train in question', was not sufficient of itself to warrant the court in assuming that the company had undertaken as to him the duties and obligations of a carrier of passengers. In the absence of proof to the contrary, the presumption is that he was not a passenger.
Not only is this presumption not overcome by the evidence, but it is strengthened thereby. The uncontradicted evidence shows that Shipman applied for passage to the conductor of the train, before the same left the depot at Pueblo, and while it is true that this application was made for a free ride upon a letter which the deceased exhibited, the conductor testifies that he not only refused to carry him upon the letter, but refused to carry him upon the train. This is the substance of all the evidence in reference to the conversation that took place between the conductor and Shipman at Pueblo, previous
The case as then made is not materially aided in this respect, by any evidence thereafter introduced.
The fact that the conductor, after discovering Shipman in the caboose, did not eject him, did not constitute the latter a passenger. The evidence shows that the conductor did not discover his presence until the train was well under way, and had proceeded a distance out of the city. The argument, that it was the duty of the conductor under the circumstances to stop the train and eject him from the car, cannot be given much weight, in view of the circumstances. The answer to this argument is found in the testimony of that officer, in answer to the following question :
“ Why did you not stop the train and put him off ? A. I just didn’t have the heart to do it. I didn’t feel disposed to put off a cripple in the middle of the night, out in the country.”
If the deceased had been a strong, able-bodied man, traveling in the daytime, it would perhaps have been the conductor’s duty to have put him off at the first station, but if, from feelings of humanity he allowed a cripple to remain on the car, rather than put him off at midnight, certainly the law will not from this forbearance raise the presumption that the deceased was entitled to all the rights of a passenger upon the defendant’s train. The real question is as to whether the defendant should be held to have consented to receiving the deceased as a passenger upon its freight train.
If the defendant had been in the habit of carrying passengers upon such trains, evidence of this fact should have been produced. To overcome the presumption against such a custom, it is not sufficient that in the present instance there were upon the caboose others beside Shipman. With one exception, they were all men in charge of stock upon the train, and it may be customary for such persons to travel on the same train with the stock, and not for others to do so.
In our opinion, the deceased is not shown to have been a passenger at the time of the accident. A • number of well considered cases wilL be found supporting this conclusion.
In the case of Eaton v. The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, 57 N. Y. 382, the plaintiff got upon a coal train on the defendant’s road, at the invitation of the conductor. To this train no passenger car was attached, but at the end of the train there was a caboose in which plaintiff was invited to, and did ride. Through the negligence of the company’s employees, the train was run into by another, and plaintiff injured. At the trial it was shown that by a regulation of the defendant, printed for the use of employees, passengers were forbidden to ride on coal trains, but of this regulation plaintiff had no actual notice. It did not appear that it was the custom to allow passengers to ride in the caboose. Under these circumstances the trial court instructed the jury that if plaintiff was upon the train with the assent of the conductor, and without being informed of the regulation, then defendant was liable. Upon appeal, this instruction was held erroneous, and the liability of the company denied. It wits said that there was nothing in the attendant circumstances indicating an apparent authority in the conductor to create between the parties the relation of passenger and carrier. It is further said in this case, in substance, that while the conductor of a passenger train has ample authority to receive passengers upon his train, that the conductor of a freight train has no such authority, and ■that in the case of a stranger riding upon a freight train, the presumption would be indulged that he is not legally a passenger, and that to such a person the company was under no obligations to be careful.
In Elkins v. The Boston & Maine Railroad Company, 3 Foster (N. H.) 275, the action was for the loss of goods carried on a passenger train. The evidence showed that the conductor of the passenger train had previously carried
In Murch v. The Concord Railroad Corporation, 9 Foster, 9, it was charged that the injury was occasioned by the failure of the companjr to furnish safe means of access for passengers upon its freight trains, and the court held that no such obligation rested upon the companjr, it not being shown that the company made it an habitual business to carry passengers upon its freight trains.
In the case of The Toledo, Wabash & Western Railway Company v. Brooks, 81 Ills. 245, it was held that no recovery could be had of the railway company for personal injuries to a passenger on its train of cars, or for his death caused by mere negligence, when such person knowingly and fraudulently induced the conductor to disregard his duty and defraud the company out of the amount of his fare for his own profit.
In the case of The Union Pacific Railway Company v. Nichols, 3 Kansas, 505, the company was engaged in transporting freight and messengers for the express company. The plaintiff was not in the employ of the express company, but went into the baggage car with the regular express messenger for the purpose of learning the route, and assisting the regular messenger with his work. The conductor did not know these facts, but supposed that such person was an express messenger in the employ of the express company, and, acting on this supposition, allowed him to ride without paying his fare. The injury was caused by the baggage car turning over, and the court held that the plaintiff was not a passenger, and not entitled to the rights of a passenger.
In the case of The Virginia Midland Railway Company v. Roach, 83 Va. 375, the action was brought by a former fire
In Waterbury v. New York C. & H. R. R. Co., 17 Fed. Rep. 671, the plaintiff, a drover having stock in-charge, claimed that he was riding on the engine by the consent of the engineer, to look after his cattle, as was customary. The defendant claimed that it was contrary to orders for anybody other than its employees to ride on the engine. The court held that as to whether defendant had, notwithstanding its rules for the government of its employees, by its conduct held out its employees to the plaintiff as authorized under the circumstanqes to consent to his being carried on the train, should have been submitted to the jury. The court further held that it was a presumption of the law that persons riding upon trains which are palpably not designed for the transportation of passengers are unlawfully there, and that if it be shown that the consent of the carrier’s employees had been obtained” to their being there, the presumption is against the authority of employees binding the carriers by such consent. It was said, however, that such presumption may be overthrown by special circumstances, and where the railroad company would derive a benefit from the presence of drovers upon its cattle trains, and may have allowed its employees in charge of such trains to invite, or permit drovers to accompany the cattle, the presumption against the license to the person thus carried may be overthrown.
An examination of the cases cited, as opposed to the con
In Dunn v. The Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada, 58 Mo. 187, the injured party, although riding in the caboose of a freight tram contrary to the rules of the company, was treated by the conductor as a passenger, and first-class fare collected from him.
In Cleveland v. The New Jersey Steamboat Company, 63 N Y. 306, the plaintiff was injured before the boat upon which he was a passenger had left its wharf, and before he had an opportunity to pay fare, and the court held that the carrier owed him the duty of a carrier to passengers, although no fare had been paid.
In Jacobus v. The St. Paul & Chicago Railway Company, 20 Minn. 125, the plaintiff received a personal injury through the negligence of the defendant’s servants in charge of a passenger train, upon which plaintiff was traveling on a free pass, and the court held that the same degree of care was required of defendant as if plaintiff had been a passenger for hire. Here the company had undertaken to carry, and the duty arose from this fact.
In The Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. Books, 57 Pa. St. 330, the plaintiff was a route agent, riding upon a passenger train, and the court held that every one upon the car was presumed to be lawfully there as a passenger, having paid, or being 'liable, when called upon, to pay his, fare, and that the onus is upon the carrier to prove affirmatively that he was a trespasser. The case has no similarity to the one under consideration.
In Creed v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 86 Pa. St. 130, it was held that “ where one is traveling by a passenger train, and is not connected with the railroad company, the legal presumption is that he is a passenger and traveling for a consideration.” A conclusion which we do not dispute.
As to the criticism of Judge Thompson upon the decision in Eaton v. The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, to be found in his work on Carriers of Passengers,
It not appearing that the deceased was a passenger upon the defendant’s freight train, the plaintiff is not entitled to a recovery under the second subdivision of the statute, and the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed.